4.7 Article

Local non-equilibrium diffusion model for solute trapping during rapid solidification

Journal

ACTA MATERIALIA
Volume 60, Issue 6-7, Pages 2711-2718

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.actamat.2012.01.036

Keywords

Solute trapping; Rapid solidification; Local non-equilibrium diffusion; Hyperbolic diffusion equation

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A local non-equilibrium diffusion model (LNDM) for rapid solidification of binary alloys has been briefly reviewed and used to modify a number of solute trapping models with different solid-liquid interface kinetics. The LNDM takes into account deviation from local equilibrium of a solute diffusion field in bulk liquid on the basis that the exact solutions to hyperbolic diffusion equations govern the solute concentration and solute flux in bulk liquid under local non-equilibrium conditions. The LNDM leads to a velocity-dependent effective diffusion coefficient in bulk liquid ahead of the solid-liquid interface D-b(LNDM)(V), which goes to zero when the interface velocity V -> V-Db, where V-Db is the bulk liquid diffusion speed. The results show an abrupt transition from diffusion-limited to purely thermally controlled solidification, with the diffusion coefficient in bulk liquid D-b(LNDM)(V) = 0 and complete solute trapping K-LNDM(V) = 1 at a finite interface velocity V= V-Db for any type of solid-liquid interface kinetics. The bulk liquid diffusion speed V-Db is a critical parameter for the transition. The velocity dependence of partition coefficients K-LNDM(V) has been calculated for different types of solid-liquid interface kinetics, with allowance for local non-equilibrium diffusion effects. The calculation shows that the local non-equilibrium partition coefficients K-LNDM(V) reduce to the standard K(V) at low interface velocity (V << V-Db) and differ substantially at high interface velocity (V similar to V-Db). (C) 2012 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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